Psychology and the Internet : intrapersonal, interpersonal, and transpersonal implications

Contributors Acknowledgments Introduction 1. The Internet in Context Part I Intrapersonal 2. Children and the Internet 3. Self Online: Personality and Demogrpahic Implications 4. Disinhibition and the Internet 5. The Psychology of Sex: A Mirror from the Internet 6. Internet Addiction: Does it Really Exist? (Revisited) Part II Interpersonal 7. Revisiting Computer--Mediated Communication for Work, Community, and Learning 8. The Virtual Society: Its Driving Forces, Arrangements, Practices and Implications 9. Internet Self-Help and Support Groups: The Pros and Cons of Text-Based Mutual Aid 10. Cyber Shrinks: Expanding the Paradigm Part III Transpersonal 11. From Mediatred Environments to the Development of Consciousness II 12. World Wide Brain: Self-Organizing Internet Intelligence as the Actualization of the Collective Unconscious 13. The Internet and Higher States of Consciousness--A Transpersonal Perspective Index